In Cuba, peso makes a comeback, pleasing customers

SANTIAGO DE CUBA (Reuters) – Retail outlets selling everything in Cuban pesos are popping up across the country in what may be the government’s first steps toward phasing out its unpopular two-currency system.

The establishments opened the past year in a reversal of two decades of national policy that priced most goods and services in a dollar-linked convertible peso widely known by its acronym, the CUC.

“They have opened restaurants, pizzerias, cafeterias and pastry shops and set up areas across the city where they sell sandwiches, snacks and soda,” said retiree Pedro de la Fuente from Guantanamo, the capital city of Cuba’s easternmost province.

“The population has welcomed this because before these things were available only in convertible pesos,” he said.

The change appears to be part of President Raul Castro’s plan to make more goods and services available in pesos in a gradual transition away from the two-currency system, which he has pledged to eliminate.

Since taking over from his ailing brother Fidel two years ago, Raul Castro has pledged to make daily life easier in the communist state, where the government tightly regulates almost all economic activity.

He has taken steps to reform agriculture to increase food production, liberalize the sale of computers, cell phones and domestic appliances and free up the official media to criticize bureaucratic mismanagement.

Cuba adopted the dollar as its second currency to prop up its economy, which spiraled into a deep depression after the Soviet Union, the island’s benefactor for 30 years, collapsed in 1991.

The dollar was eventually replaced by the CUC, which is pegged at a value of US$1.08 to one.

Cubans have complained mightily about the two-tier system, saying it makes too many things unaffordable for them unless they receive dollars from relatives living abroad.

The average Cuban salary is 440 pesos a month, the equivalent of 18 CUCs at the current exchange rate of 24 pesos to one.

The epicentre of change is Santiago de Cuba, the island’s second largest city, where far more peso outlets have opened than in other cities.

“There is a special plan, where the party and government allocated Santiago a budget to remodel dozens of establishments and open new ones,” a Communist Party cadre and administrator of various eating places said, asking her name not be used because she was not authorized to talk with foreign journalists.

“The idea is for the population to feel good, to have the services they deserve, to be able to sit down in any restaurant, cafeteria or what have you and pay in pesos,” she said.

For the 50 per cent of the population with some dollar income from family remittances, state bonuses, tips or other sources, the prices are often a steal, but they are only occasionally accessible to those not so fortunate.